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Introduction to Greek Theatre

Introduction to Greek Theatre. Watch this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aSRLK7SogvE. The Purpose. Not simply entertainment Linked with sacred rituals and with the Athenian social/political system Plays were written for the annual spring festival of Dionysus. The Theatre.

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Introduction to Greek Theatre

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  1. Introduction to Greek Theatre

  2. Watch this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aSRLK7SogvE

  3. The Purpose • Not simply entertainment • Linked with sacred rituals and with the Athenian social/political system • Plays were written for the annual spring festival of Dionysus

  4. The Theatre • Plays were performed in outdoor, arena style theatres • Performances took place during daylight hours

  5. Skene– “tent” covered structures where actors stored costumes and masks (originally temporary wood structure eventually stone) and performed quick changes out of sight. • Central doors • Upper platform • Paraskenia– “beside the skene” wings on the side • Chorus stayed in the orchestra but actors used skene to make entrances and exits • Proscenion– platform in front of the skene • Parodos – “passageways” actors took to enter and exit the proscenion. Ramps on the side of stage between skene and audience. • Machines inside skene: • Aeorema– crane for God’s entrances • Periactoi – pillars that turned to change the scene • Ekeclema– carts to carry in dead because murder or suicide was not performed onstage.

  6. The Theatre (Continued) • It looks like this:

  7. The Conventions of Greek Drama • Because the Greek outdoor theatre was so large, actors could not depend on facial expressions or vocal inflections to

  8. Conventions • Actors relied on large, simple physical gestures and on their ability to voice the poetry of the script. • No female actors.

  9. Conventions (Continued) • Chorus of approximately15 actors who represented townspeople or other groups of people in the play.

  10. Watch this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bP7_XERqv-Y

  11. The Greek Mask • Actors wore stylized masks individual to each character • Could easily be seen from the top rows of the audience- helpful since theatres were large

  12. The Greek Mask • Acted as a megaphone to help project the voice • Helped just three actors play all the roles in a play, including the female characters since there were no female actors.

  13. Style of Costumes • Essentially the same as the Greeks’ daily wear, with some exaggeration. • The actors wore robes of finely woven wool or linen in a variety of colors.

  14. Festival of Dionysus • Annual festival usually lasted 5-6 days • National holiday • Each day a different dramatist was featured.

  15. The Festival Continued • The dramatist would offer four plays • a trilogy (or three tragedies centered around one theme) • a satire or farce, that made fun of the same tragic figures and provided the needed comic relief.

  16. The Festival Continued • Comedies were sometimes given in the afternoon during the City Dionysia. • Most comedies performed at the Lenaea festival where prizes were awarded for best comic writer

  17. Aristotle • Famous poet and philosopher • Identified 5 Elements for Tragedy

  18. Aristotelian Elements • Tragedy must provide catharsis (an emotional purge) • The hero must be someone of high social position and have a tragic flaw • Ex. “hubris:” excessive pride

  19. Elements Continued • There must be a change of fortune or discovery • Plays must be written in the highest form of poetry.

  20. Elements Continued • Three Unities • Action (related events) • Time (within 24 hrs) • Place (one locale)

  21. Violence • All violence happened off stage- Greeks found it distasteful to watch

  22. Famous Playwrights • Sophocles (tragedies) • Euripides (tragedies) • Aristophanes (comedies) • Menander (comedies)

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